Suspicious: employee from grocery store across the street buying tons of strawberries from Walmart

Your photo reminds me of my own recent personal chip-on-my-shoulder.

My area has a local chain of grocery stores that stocks a closeout section with clothing, housewares, and so forth, all for incredibly good prices if you're willing to put up with, usually, some small undisclosed flaw on the product. But it's known/understood when you're shopping there and priced accordingly. I recently found their racks lined with lots of thermal shirts by a Target brand for $1.99. I bought one. Turns out the flaw on the shirt is either that the sizing was incorrectly marked or the fabric was mis-cut. It's just weirdly huge and drafty for a thermal. I'll wear it tucked-in, whatever. Made a mental note to get more, maybe.

A week later I return to grocery shop and decided to also check Goodwill next door. ALL of the $2 shirts from the grocery store are now on the racks at Goodwill for $8. There's no longer any disclaimer that they are flawed in any way. So while the grocery store is over there trying to keep the local low-income population clothed and comfortable at a generous rate, Goodwill is happy to hoard the items and attempt to profit. I know they're no saints but for all the talk they make about helping the less fortunate live better lives, this seems like a calculated community disservice.

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